Following in the footsteps of such larger than
life wrestling legends as Andre The Giant, Jimmy “Superfly” Snuka, Buddy Rogers, Gorilla Monsoon, and Superstar
Billy Graham, World Wrestling Entertainment announces that "Rowdy" Roddy Piper, “Mr. Wonderful” Paul Orndorff,
The Iron Sheik, Nikolai Volkoff, “Cowboy” Bob Orton, “The Mouth of the South” Jimmy Hart,
and The Immortal Hulk Hogan will be among the legends inducted into the WWE Hall of Fame on Saturday night,
April 2, 2005, the day before WrestleMania 21.

On Sunday, April 3, WrestleMania Goes Hollywood when
the granddaddy of them all, WrestleMania, kicks off live from the STAPLES Center.

The WrestleMania card is already taking shape,
as numerous matches have been signed to take place, including two World Championship matches.

In the RAW version of the main event,
Triple H will defend the World Heavyweight Championship against his former Evolution running mate Batista. The last time WrestleMania
hailed from California, Triple H walked in and out of the event as WWE Champion. Can Triple H recreate the same magic
he had at WrestleMania 2000? Or will Batista's momentum propel him to a the biggest victory of his career? Watch WrestleMania
21 to find out.

SmackDown's WWE Championship will also be on the line at WrestleMania
21 when JBL defends the championship against John Cena. JBL has proven himself as the most successful WWE Champion of last
decade, holding the championship an amazing 277 days. Can JBL continue to win? Or will Cena dethrone the dominant champion?

Stone Cold Steve Austin will make his
highly anticipated return to WWE at WrestleMania 21 when he makes an appearance on Piper's Pit. Both Stone Cold and WWE Hall of Famer "Rowdy"
Roddy Piper have been known to say absolutely anything, regardless of who they anger. What will these two legends have to
say when they have a microphone in their hands on live television? There's only one way to find out.

In a cross-promotional match, the self-proclaimed Mr. WrestleMania
Shawn Michaels of RAW will finally battle SmackDown's Kurt Angle. Since Royal Rumble, these two Superstars have been chomping
at the bit to get at each other, highlighted by surprise appearances on each other's brand.

Y2J had an idea. Eric Bischoff capitalized
on it. When Chris Jericho had an plan for WrestleMania, which included six Superstars, a chance of a lifetime and a ladder;
a light in Bischoff's head went off. The RAW General Manager immediately picked five other Superstars to participate in the
match -- Shelton Benjamin, Edge, Chris Benoit, Christian and Kane -- and assigned the prize, a future opportunity at the World
Heavyweight Championship. Who will walk away from the Money-In-The-Bank
Ladder Match with the opportunity of a lifetime? Watch WrestleMania
to find out.

The legendary Undertaker puts his perfect
12-0 WrestleMania record on the line April 3 when he faces off against the Legend Killer Randy Orton. Can the Deadman make
it 13 in a row? Or will Orton turn back yet another legend of sports-entertainment?

In the largest match in WrestleMania
history, Big Show will compete in a Sumo Match against Sumo champion Akebono. Show admits he is out of his element in this type of match, but claims that he is the
only man on the planet that Akebono cannot push around. Find out if this is true at WrestleMania 21.

Additionally, Trish Stratus will put the
Women's Championship on the line at WrestleMania when she faces off against Playboy cover girl Christy Hemme. In recent weeks,
Christy has been training with former Women's Champion Lita. Will Lita's tutelage be enough for Christy to dethrone Trish?
Or will the six-time Women's Champion continue her dominance over the women's division?

All this and more Sunday, April 3rd, on pay-per-view.
Stay logged on WWFuWrestling.com.

Tinseltown's Longtime Affair With Wrestling

World Wrestling Entertainment is going Hollywood for
its 21st annual "Wrestlemania" this year. But Hollywood came calling for wrestlers a long time ago.

The setting could not be more appropriate as WWE —
formerly known as the World Wrestling Federation — will present "Wrestlemania 21" on April 3 in the shadow of Hollywood
at Los Angeles' Staples Center. "Wrestlemania 21" comes as pro wrestlers are bodyslamming the Big Screen.

"The Rock" Dwayne Johnson — who first rose to
fame as a third-generation WWE wrestler — drew some critical acclaim and laughs as a gay bodyguard/aspiring actor in
"Be Cool," the sequel to "Get Shorty." Octogenarian legendary wrestlers The Fabulous Moolah and Mae Young are featured in
"Lipstick & Dynamite," a documentary about lady pro wrestlers that opened in limited release on Friday. And wrestlers
such as Stone Cold Steve Austin, Bill Goldberg, and Total Nonstop Action Wrestling's Kevin Nash will star opposite Adam Sandler,
Chris Rock and Burt Reynolds in a remake of "The Longest Yard" when it opens Memorial Day weekend.

Still, the gladiators of the squared circle are not
new to Tinseltown. Hollywood has long recognized their star potential. Wrestling — or what some have referred to as
"sports entertainment" in recent years — calls on its performers to adopt an in-ring persona when they entertain the
audience.

Some say wrestlers, who blend athleticism with charisma
and theatrics, are cinematic naturals.

"It is a form of theater. Most of the wrestlers' characters
— in-ring personas — are exaggerated, blown-up version of themselves," said Gerald W. Morton, a language and literature
professor at Auburn University Montgomery in Alabama and author of "Wrestling to Rasslin': Ancient Sport to American Spectacle."
"This is the best stage for suspending our belief that we can experience in a drama."

Stars on the Mat, Stars on the Screen

The Mexican film industry recognized the star appeal
of wrestlers back in the 1950s. Late legendary masked wrestler El Santo starred in 59 Mexican films during an in-ring career
that lasted 48 years. Hollywood was a little slow to take wrestlers outside their traditional environment, but it has had
a long-standing relationship with them.

In the 1970s, the late Andre the Giant made several
guest appearances as the bionic Bigfoot opposite Lee Majors in television's "The Six Million Dollar Man" and had a role in
the 1987 movie "The Princess Bride." "Rowdy" Roddy Piper surprised critics with a commanding, not-so-campy performance in
his starring role in the 1988 cult favorite sci-fi flick "They Live." Former National Wrestling Alliance Champion Terry Funk
showed Sylvester Stallone and Patrick Swayze his brawling skills in "Over the Top" and "Road House," respectively. And former
Minnesota Gov. Jesse Ventura — who has had several small roles on the big and small screen — most memorably fought
alongside Arnold Schwarzenegger in "Predator."

WWE's Steve Austin had a recurring role in the CBS TV
series "Nash Bridges" in the late 1990s. Triple H, the world champion of WWE's program "Raw," had a supporting role opposite
Wesley Snipes in this winter's "Blade: Trinity" and has made guest TV appearances on shows such as "The Bernie Mac Show" and
"Mad TV."

Some credit WWE Chairman Vince McMahon's promotion of
wrestling as entertainment, not primarily as sport, with keeping his product in the spotlight and opening opportunities for
wrestlers within and outside his company.

"He's always understood what is going on in society
and sure knows what to do to keep the WWE at the forefront of the entertainment industry," Morton said. "At the time, when
Vince McMahon took such a bold step of promoting wrestling as entertainment and put aside any pretext of big sport, I would
have thought that maybe he would get four or five [successful] years, tops, with that strategy."

An Up-and-Coming Star

In some ways, Hollywood and Wrestlemania have always
been synonymous. In the first Wrestlemania in 1985, Hulk Hogan teamed with Mr. T — who was at the height of his popularity
as a star of "The A-Team" — in the main event. In its long history, stars such as Pamela Anderson, Liberace, Burt Reynolds,
Aretha Franklin, among others have appeared at "Wrestlemania."

To promote its biggest show of the year in commercials
and on their programs, WWE stars have been involved in spoofs of famous scenes from films such as "Pulp Fiction," "When Harry
Met Sally," "A Few Good Men," "Braveheart," "Forrest Gump," "Taxi Driver," "Basic Instinct" and "Dirty Harry."

One of the wrestlers featured in the spoofs was John
Cena, who will be part of one of the main events at "Wrestlemania 21" when he battles titlist "JBL" John "Bradshaw" Layfield
for the WWE championship. The two opponents faced off in a spoof of the famous "You Can't Handle the Truth" scene from 1992's
"A Few Good Men," with Cena playing Tom Cruise's role and JBL taking on Jack Nicholson's character.

Given his muscularity and chiseled, youthful good looks,
Cena, 27, was arguably a natural choice to depict Cruise's character. His in-ring persona — a hip-hop loving, throwback
sports jersey-wearing grappler who thrills fans with his matches and wisecracking raps on his opponents — has the kind
of charisma and crossover appeal potential WWE hopes will help him become organization's new face since "The Rock's" full-time
departure to Hollywood.

But Cena is just thrilled to be one of "Wrestlemania's"
main attractions.

"For me, it's a little bit special, given I was in the
opening match last year and I wasn't even on the program two years ago," Cena said. "Now I'm going after the most coveted
prize in our business. It's really something special."

Cena would not be a traditional face of WWE. He looks
more like a D.J. — albeit a muscular one — than a wrestler.

Cena sports a heavy chain with a padlock around his
neck. Instead of wearing traditional wrestling trunks and boots to the ring, he prefers baggy jean shorts and retro-air pump
high-top sneakers. While he was WWE United States Champion, he turned the traditional static championship belt into a "spinner"
belt that resembled a turntable or tire rims — a tribute to rap and hip-hop.

Adoring fans — which Cena refers to as his "Chain
Gang," much like Hogan did with his "Hulkamaniacs" — started making spinner belt signs and bought replica souvenir belts.

"I attribute my success to people who got behind it,"
Cena continued. "I wouldn't be where I am without the people getting on board the whole thing. I can guarantee you that if
I win [the WWE championship at "Wrestlemania 21"], you see the most iced-out, tripped out WWE title belt you've ever seen."

If Cena wins the WWE championship, his rise will have
been relatively quick, as most of his colleagues in the past have spent several years paying dues in the industry before earning
the responsibility of carrying an organization. He respects tradition but takes pride in being untraditional.

"I'm doing things a little differently. I have respect
for tradition but I'm like the polar opposite of tradition," Cena said. "I've gotten to where I am in a non-traditional way.
It's an achievement for hip-hop."

Cena sported the more traditional wrestling look when
he first appeared on WWE television three years ago. WWE writers allowed him freedom to express himself and develop his current
in-ring persona when they heard him rap backstage.

Cena bristles at the notion that his in-ring character
is a gimmick. Growing up in West Newbury, Mass., he says he grew up listening to rap, wears hip-hop fashion outside the ring,
and is a fan of sports history. The wrestling persona is just an extension of who he is and what he likes.

"When people ask, 'What do you think of your gimmick?'
it drives me crazy," Cena said. "It's not a gimmick. What I wear in in ring, that's what I wear when I'm going to the arena."

Crossover Success Not an Easy Pin

"Wrestlemania 21" will pay homage to wrestling tradition
and its Hollywood ties.

On the eve of the event, three of the four participants
in the main event of the first Wrestlemania — Hogan, Piper, "Cowboy" Bob Orton, Jr. and "Mr. Wonderful" Paul Orndorff
— will be inducted into WWE's Hall of Fame. Sylvester Stallone —who had a fight scene with Hogan in "Rocky III"
— will introduce him when he is honored.

Cena, who grew up idolizing Hogan, is looking forward
to seeing his induction.

Though Hogan is arguably the world's most famous wrestler,
he was not able to pin Hollywood to the mat. Movies in the early 1990s such as "Suburban Commando" and "Mr. Nanny" were critically
scorned and commercial flops.

"The Rock" has been the only wrestler to parlay his
in-ring success into a full-time Hollywood career. Since turning some heads for his small role in 2002's "The Mummy Returns,"
he has been in starring roles in movies such as "The Scorpion King," "The Rundown" and the remake of "Walking Tall."

Cena has enjoyed some crossover commercial success —
and there may be much more to come. He has made guest appearances on several hip-hop radio stations nationwide, appeared on
the covers of bodybuilding and fitness magazines in his three-year rise in WWE. He has a rap CD, "You Can't See Me," coming
out in May.

"Cena is the man who fans most want to see these days,"
said "Sir Adam" Adam Kleinberg, who along with Adam "The Phantom" Nudelman hosts "Get in the Ring," an Internet radio wrestling
program, and has co-written the forthcoming book "Mysteries of Wrestling." "He's the man fans react the most. He has the mic
skills that Vince McMahon likes."

Ready for Their Close-Up

Cena is also one of the cornerstones on which WWE hopes
to build a success foray into film. WWE Films, the company's Los Angeles-based film and television division, was formed in
2002, and Cena stars in one of the first movies under its production, "The Marine," due to be released in the fall.

Some fans say Cena could surprise some skeptics.

"I was really impressed with Cena in that ["Wrestlemania"]
promo he and JBL did of 'A Few Good Men,' " said Nudelman. "He was really good. It was different than the role [on WWE television]
that we normally see him in."

It's debatable how well the WWE-produced films will
do, given WWE's failed previous attempts in other non-wrestling ventures such as bodybuilding with the World Bodybuilding
Federation (WBF) and the football with the XFL. But Cena wants to show those who may have a close-minded view of wrestlers
or forget that "The Rock" rose to prominence as a wrestler that there is talent potential in WWE.

"My short and long-term goals are the same: To let everyone
know that WWE is the best sports entertainment company, the best place for live sports entertainment," Cena said. "There are
some athletes here. There's a lot of talent here."

Mr. DeMille, I believe Mr. Cena and his friends are
ready for their close-up.